The Works of Edgar Allan Poe — Volume 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 348 pages of information about The Works of Edgar Allan Poe — Volume 2.
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The Works of Edgar Allan Poe — Volume 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 348 pages of information about The Works of Edgar Allan Poe — Volume 2.
clung to the wood —­ they overran it, and leaped in hundreds upon my person.  The measured movement of the pendulum disturbed them not at all.  Avoiding its strokes they busied themselves with the anointed bandage.  They pressed —­ they swarmed upon me in ever accumulating heaps.  They writhed upon my throat; their cold lips sought my own; I was half stifled by their thronging pressure; disgust, for which the world has no name, swelled my bosom, and chilled, with a heavy clamminess, my heart.  Yet one minute, and I felt that the struggle would be over.  Plainly I perceived the loosening of the bandage.  I knew that in more than one place it must be already severed.  With a more than human resolution I lay still.

Nor had I erred in my calculations —­ nor had I endured in vain.  I at length felt that I was free.  The surcingle hung in ribands from my body.  But the stroke of the pendulum already pressed upon my bosom.  It had divided the serge of the robe.  It had cut through the linen beneath.  Twice again it swung, and a sharp sense of pain shot through every nerve.  But the moment of escape had arrived.  At a wave of my hand my deliverers hurried tumultuously away.  With a steady movement —­ cautious, sidelong, shrinking, and slow —­ I slid from the embrace of the bandage and beyond the reach of the scimitar.  For the moment, at least, I was free.

Free! —­ and in the grasp of the Inquisition!  I had scarcely stepped from my wooden bed of horror upon the stone floor of the prison, when the motion of the hellish machine ceased and I beheld it drawn up, by some invisible force, through the ceiling.  This was a lesson which I took desperately to heart.  My every motion was undoubtedly watched.  Free! —­ I had but escaped death in one form of agony, to be delivered unto worse than death in some other.  With that thought I rolled my eves nervously around on the barriers of iron that hemmed me in.  Something unusual —­ some change which, at first, I could not appreciate distinctly —­ it was obvious, had taken place in the apartment.  For many minutes of a dreamy and trembling abstraction, I busied myself in vain, unconnected conjecture.  During this period, I became aware, for the first time, of the origin of the sulphurous light which illumined the cell.  It proceeded from a fissure, about half an inch in width, extending entirely around the prison at the base of the walls, which thus appeared, and were, completely separated from the floor.  I endeavored, but of course in vain, to look through the aperture.

As I arose from the attempt, the mystery of the alteration in the chamber broke at once upon my understanding.  I have observed that, although the outlines of the figures upon the walls were sufficiently distinct, yet the colors seemed blurred and indefinite.  These colors had now assumed, and were momentarily assuming, a startling and most intense brilliancy, that gave to the spectral and fiendish portraitures an aspect that might have thrilled even firmer nerves than my own.  Demon eyes, of a wild and ghastly vivacity, glared upon me in a thousand directions, where none had been visible before, and gleamed with the lurid lustre of a fire that I could not force my imagination to regard as unreal.

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The Works of Edgar Allan Poe — Volume 2 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.